Friday, October 31, 2014

The Original Goro





Those readers who play video games probably remember the character Goro from Mortal Kombat. Here is the original Goro, a character created in a kabuki play around 1700. If you've read the first book in our Samurai Detective series, you know that Seikei had to join a kabuki acting troupe to catch the thief. Kabuki was very popular in Japan, and the actor Ichikawa Danjuro played Goro, who was a man with unlimited physical powers. He actually helped the hero of the play overcome his enemies. This print, by the artist Torii Kiyomasu, was made to sell to fans of Danjuro, who wanted to see him in his Goro role.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

A Sea Monster

Here is another print by Kuniyoshi. This one illustrated a story about a sailor, Kawanaya Tokuzo. Tokuzo decided to take his boat out to sea on the last day of the year. Sailors regarded this as an unlucky day and usually stayed in port. (It made the holiday longer as well.) Sure enough, Tokuzo encountered a violent storm, threatening to overturn his boat. Then a sea monster named Umibozu suddenly rose from the waves. He commanded Tokuzo: "Name the most horrible thing you know!" Tokuzo at once replied, "My profession. That's the most horrible thing I know." The monster sank into the sea and the storm blew away.
According to one source, the artist Vincent Van Gogh was so impressed with this print that he had a copy of it pinned to his wall for inspiration.


Tuesday, October 14, 2014

A Ghost Inspires a Poet

Here is another of Kuniyoshi's prints. This one was used to illustrate a collection of poetry. It shows the poet Dainagon Tsunenobu, who lived about a thousand years ago. He is seen writing his most famous poem, which goes:

When the evening comes
From the rice leaves at my gate
Gentle knocks are heard;
And, into my round rush-hut,
Autumn's roaming breeze makes way.

Just as Tsunenobu finished the poem, a ghost appeared outside his window and recited another poem. This one was written by a Chinese poet known in Japanese as Hakuraten. If only writing stories and poems were as easy as waiting for a ghost to recite one to you!




Sunday, October 5, 2014

Who We Are and What This Blog is For

We're Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler, and if you got this far, you probably know we have written seven novels about Seikei, a boy in 18th-century Japan--the age of the samurai. You can find a list of our books elsewhere on this blog. Some of our readers are interested enough in Japanese culture that we thought they might want to read more about it. So from time to time, we're going to post more stories and history about Japan. We hope you'll write us at TandDHoob@gmail.com to let us know what you like and don't like. Of course, if you find mistakes, tell us about them too.


The Picture Below

We thought this was a pretty cool pic to start with. You can see it larger on our Facebook page, "The Samurai Detective Series." It came from a print made in the late 1840s by Utagawa Kuniyoshi. It is part of a series illustrating a play about Taira no Masakado, a warrior who lived in the 10th century. He was a ruthless man who killed his own nephew so he could become governor of the nephew's province. That was not enough to satisfy Masakado's ambition. He led a rebellion against the emperor himself, and sought to create his own empire in eastern Japan. The emperor sent an army to try to put down Masakado's rebellion, and he was captured and killed. His head was brought back to Kyoto, the true emperor's capital city, and displayed in the marketplace.

Now the mythical part begins. Masakado's head flew off on its own and landed in Shibasaki, a small fishing village where the city of Tokyo now stands. The head was finally buried and many people, who  resented the government's harsh treatment, made Masakado a hero. People still visit a shrine built in his honor in Tokyo. His daughter, known as Princess Takiyasha, continued to live in her father's palace, and became a sorceress. When the emperor sent warriors to find her, she summoned up the body of her father in the form of a giant skeleton and he drove them off. This is the scene in the print by Kuniyoshi.

The original print of this picture has three parts. Only two of them are shown here. The third shows the sorceress Takiyasha casting her spell. We'll try to post that too when we get a chance.